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Building Molecular Complexity from Quinizarin: Conjoined Coumarins and Coronene Analogs.

Marek K WęcławskiIrena DeperasinskaMarzena BanasiewiczDavid C YoungArkadiusz LeniakDaniel T Gryko
Published in: Chemistry, an Asian journal (2018)
The double Knoevenagel condensation of 1,4-dibenzoyloxyanthraquinone with methyl esters of arylacetic acids affords a series of compounds based upon a previously unknown 1,8-dioxa-benzo[e]pyrene-2,7-dione heterocyclic core. The aryl groups incorporated in the 3- and 6-positions can be oxidatively coupled to the π-expanded backbone to produce a further new heterocyclic core: 1,10-dioxa-dibenzo[dj]coronene-2,9-dione. The intriguing optical properties of these π-expanded coumarin derivatives are discussed and rationalized through quantum chemical calculations. The broad absorption bands of 1,8-dioxa-benzo[e]pyrene-2,7-dione-based dyes are attributed to both HOMO-1→LUMO and HOMO→LUMO transitions, which have a similar energy. Weakly coupled electron-donating aryl substituents result in a moderate bathochromic shift of both the absorption and emission by 30-60 nm in toluene. The emissive properties of these compounds are in part determined by the oscillator strength of the main transition, lifetimes of the excited state, and by the energy match of the excited state with a triplet state of a similar energy. The 1,10-dioxa-dibenzo[dj]coronene-2,9-dione displays a much smaller Stokes shift, yet a markedly increased fluorescence quantum yield of 90 % owing to the increased rigidity compared with the 1,8-dioxa-benzo[e]pyrene-2,7-dione core.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • energy transfer
  • fluorescent probe